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Competing Priorities for Land and Tenure. Presenter: Dr. Jolyne Sanjak. Property Rights and Resource Governance Issues and Best Practices October 2011. Outline. Overview of competing priorities and implications A closer look at competing priorities
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Competing Priorities for Land and Tenure Presenter: Dr. JolyneSanjak Property Rights and Resource Governance Issues and Best Practices October 2011
Outline • Overview of competing priorities and implications • A closer look at competing priorities • Local livelihoods and resource management • Commercial “pressures” (including agriculture, energy and financial market dynamics) • Urbanization • Climate change and expansion of protected areas • Food security • And the nexus of all of the above • LTPR intervention strategies
What are the competing uses and users? What is the problem? Overview
Types of investments or stakes in land • Direct/productive investments in land, food, animal feed, and biofuels to: • ensure national food security despite food price volatility • acquire water resources or non drought-ridden land • obtain raw materials needed for industrialization • seek commercial returns • address environmental concerns and policy mandates • Land as a commodity for host country governments to sell or lease • Indirect/speculative investments to diversify portfolios • Rural farmers or customary group tenure and livelihoods
Negative impacts for the poor and vulnerable Competing priorities for land can adversely affect the poor --- particularly when the related land transfers or conversions are not done with ‘good governance’; --- and can increase risk to investors too
ZONE 4 ZONE 3 ZONE 2 Local livelihoods and resource management Modified slide from: “LAND ISSUES AND RURAL DEVELOPMENT IN MOZAMBIQUE: 2007” Chris Tanner, FAO Senior Technical Advisor, Centre for Juridical and Judicial Training (CFJJ) and Simon Norfolk, Consultant, Terra Firma Lda prepared for DfID Maputo 9 March 2007 ZONE 1
Commercial uses • Massive agricultural investment is needed to meet global food security needs • In 2010, global private sector investment in agriculture reached $14 billion (OECD) • Investment in agricultural land in developing countries has accelerated rapidly in recent years • Demand drivers: global food and financial crises, biofuels
Scope: Big to huge • From 2001 to 2011: 57-80 million HA of land were subject of land acquisitions or proposed land deals by foreign investors (WB, ILC) • 2006 to mid-2009: 15-20 million HA of farmland were acquired or proposed to be acquired (IFPRI) • Some nations, e.g., Madagascar (Daewoo deal) and Mozambique, have had requests for more than half of their cultivable land area • 2.6 million HA already acquired in South Sudan • Lack of good data due to lack of laws requiring disclosure, commercial secrecy and/or corruption, poor state of land records Large-Scale Acquisition of Land for Commercial Purposes
How deals often happen • Those with informal (but socially legitimate) rights are ignored • No meaningful consultation, if any • Expropriation (for private gain?) and without proper process or adequate compensation • Inadequate, mostly unenforceable contracts; low prices; and limited access to dispute resolution • Lack of transparency and corruption
Climate change and conservation • Reduces productive value of land and natural resources and put pressures on adjacent productive land • Further marginalization & disenfranchisement • Managing gradual and sudden-onset climate-related environmental processes • Domestic and international climate change mitigation and conservation schemes (carbon sequestration, REDD) • Harmonizing international laws, treaties, and conservation investments with national laws and local customs Source: Mark Freudenberger and David Miller, Climate Change, Property Rights, & Resource Governance: Emerging implications for USG Policies and Programming, USAID Property Rights and Resource Governance Briefing Paper #2, January 2010. http://usaidlandtenure.net
Food security – USG definition and description: “Food security is defined as having four main components: availability, access, utilization, and stability. Families and individuals require a reliable and consistent source of quality food, as well as sufficient resources to purchase it. People must also have the knowledge and basic sanitary conditions to choose, prepare, and distribute food in a way that results in good nutrition for all family members. Finally, the ability to access and utilize food must remain stable and sustained over time.” • Several references are found in the strategy to LTPR (see handout).
Direct linkages between LTPR and food security • Linkages may be directand focused on food production • Linkages may be indirectand focused on income generation and food consumption
Oil, food, and climate change nexus New behaviors • Competing priorities for land • Increase land values and conservation competes with domestic food production • Demand for bio-fuel production • Pressure for government to prevent against food shortage • Demands for carbon sequestration via carbon sinks New externalities • High/rising oil and food prices • Climate change New opportunities creating climate and bio-fuel elites Differential impacts on LTPR • Climate change and foreign land acquisition can destabilize or alter governance and PR regimes • Climate change to change land and natural resource-based values • Carbon sequestration takes land out of use and production Perennial land tenure struggles of disadvantaged groups further aggravated
Common misperceptions Efforts to create a better understanding are necessary …
What does success look like? • How the conversions/transfers should happen • Existing land rights defined and formalized • Prior meaningful consultation with all affected parties • Transparent transactions • Written and enforceable agreements • Win-win-win outcome • Local communities • Land rights respected or promptly and justly compensated • Receive agricultural inputs and technical advice • Gain access to new/expanded markets and jobs • Government • Community infrastructure and employment creation • Property rights system strengthened • Improved agricultural productivity and macroeconomic performance • Improved governance at local, national levels • Investor: secure profitable long-term investment
The bottom line: • For the medium term, invest in improved governance of land rights and resources • Meanwhile, get in early with identification of land rights and related issues around specific land use conflicts and land conversions/transfers or in areas of high demand to allow for: • Doing no harm • Encouraging win-win-win choices
Medium-term LTPR intervention strategies Secure individual and group rights to improve incentives for EG and to restore/protect assets Support rights awareness and effectiveness of organizations that deliver rights, foremost in areas of high demand/potential Invest in interventions that broadly strengthen institutions, governance, technology, and market access – integration Broaden access of women/vulnerable groups to protect assets and mainstream access to new economic opportunity Motivate opting for models of investment that enhance local small-holder engagement in markets Pursue the implementation of the FAO VG on Good Governance of Land, Forestry and Fisheries?
In the meantime: • Training/guidance for socially responsible firms • e.g., Roundtable on Sustainable Biofuels • TA to governments e.g., on assessing the LTPR landscape and addressing risks around particular conversions/transfers; assessing the investment benefit/cost • TA to affected parties e.g., review of contracts and dispute resolution • Principles of Responsible Agribusiness Investment • USAID Feed the Future, AGRA’s Breadbasket, SAGCOT…. can we get the LTPR equation right?